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Excerpt from: (http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/629_65.html) Otto Wallach
(b. March 27, 1847, Königsberg, Prussia [now Kaliningrad, Russia]--d.
Feb. 26, 1931, Göttingen, Ger.), German chemist awarded the 1910 Nobel Prize for Chemistry
for analyzing fragrant essential oils and identifying the compounds known
as terpenes. Wallach studied under Friedrich Wöhler at the University of
Göttingen, receiving his doctorate in 1869. He joined August Kekule at
the University of Bonn (1870), where he taught pharmacy and became professor
in 1876. From 1889 to 1915 he was director of the Chemical Institute at
Göttingen. While at Bonn, Wallach became interested in the molecular
structure of a group of essential oils that were widely used in pharmaceutical
preparations. Many of these oils were thought at the time to be chemically
distinct from one another, since they occurred in a variety of plants.
Kekule virtually denied that they could be analyzed. Nevertheless, Wallach,
a master of experimentation, was able by repeated distillation to separate
the components of these complex mixtures. Then, by studying their physical
properties, he could distinguish among the compounds many that were quite
similar to one another. He was able to isolate from the essential oils
a group of fragrant substances that he named terpenes, and he showed that
most of these compounds belonged to the class now called isoprenoids.
Wallach's work laid the scientific basis for the modern perfume industry. |
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